System and method for providing a platform as a service (paas) with a materialized shared space

ABSTRACT

A platform as a service (PaaS) is provided as part of a data sharing scheme. The PaaS is configured to setup a materialized shared space in a cloud. The materialized shared space includes a set of resources invested by the PaaS to permit data sharing between a tenant application and at least one consumer application. A sharing middleware configured to provide the at least one consumer application with access to the data in the materialized shared space.

RELATED APPLICATION INFORMATION

This application claims priority to provisional application Ser. No.61/420,479 filed on Dec. 7, 2010, the entirety of which is hereinincorporated by reference. This application is related to co-pendingU.S. application Ser. No. ______ (Attorney Docket No. 10070 (449-213)),co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. ______ (Attorney Docket No. 10072(449-215)), and co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. ______ (AttorneyDocket No. 10073 (449-216)), each of which is filed concurrentlyherewith and herein incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND

1. Technical Field

The present invention relates to mobile computing services, and moreparticularly, to a platform to support data sharing among mobilecomputing applications.

2. Description of the Related Art

A wide variety of mobile applications are currently available on mobiledevices. Unfortunately, communication and data sharing among the mobileapplications is quite limited. Communication between mobile applicationsis “adhoc”. For example, consider the communication scenario in whichYelp™, the well-known restaurant review application, allows users topost reviews of restaurants using the Facebook™ social networkingapplication. The communication between Yelp™ and Facebook™ applicationsis facilitated by Yelp™ accessing the public application programminginterface (API) for the Facebook™ application.

A major problem with the communication configuration described above isthat it is unidirectional and non-scalable. The two applications areboth required to add functionalities to be able to allow the Yelp™application to post reviews via the Facebook™ application. Specifically,the Facebook™ application has to setup an API, while the Yelp™application has to setup an interface to communicate with the API.Moreover, if the Facebook™ application desired the ability to access orpost data to the Yelp™ application, the Yelp™ application would alsohave to setup an API and the Facebook™ application would have to setup acorresponding interface. Moreover, whenever one of the applicationsdecides to alter or modify the layout of its underlying data, each ofthe applications would have to adjust their interface to the applicationaccordingly. The overhead associated with setting up and maintainingthis adhoc form of data sharing severely limits communication amongmobile applications.

The problem becomes much worse when a large number of mobileapplications each desire to share with each other. For example, considerthe scenario where a hundred applications all wish to communicate witheach other. To facilitate communication among the applications, eachapplication would have to setup ninety-nine interfaces in addition tosetting up its own API.

SUMMARY

In accordance with the present principles, a system for data sharingincludes a platform as a service (PaaS) configured to setup amaterialized shared space in a cloud. The materialized shared spaceincludes a set of resources invested by the PaaS to permit data sharingbetween a tenant application and at least one consumer application. Asharing middleware configured to provide the at least one consumerapplication with access to the data in the materialized shared space.

In accordance with the present principles, a method for data sharingincludes establishing a materialized shared space in a cloud. Thematerialized shared space includes a set of resources allocated by aPaaS to permit data sharing between a tenant application and at leastone consumer application. The at least one consumer application isprovided with access to the data in the materialized shared space topermit data sharing between the tenant application and at least oneconsumer application.

In accordance with the present principles, another method for datasharing includes determining an appropriate amount of resources to beallocated to a materialized shared space in a cloud. The materializedshared space is established to permit data sharing between a tenantapplication and at least one consumer application. A sharing view whichpermits the at least one consumer application to view and perform datasharing operations on the data in the materialized shared space.

These and other features and advantages will become apparent from thefollowing detailed description of illustrative embodiments thereof,which is to be read in connection with the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

The disclosure will provide details in the following description ofpreferred embodiments with reference to the following figures wherein:

FIG. 1 is a mobile environment which utilizes a uniform communicationframework to enable wide scale data sharing among mobile applications inaccordance with an embodiment of the present principles.

FIG. 2A is a block/flow diagram illustrating a system for enabling widescale data sharing among mobile applications in accordance with anembodiment of the present principles.

FIG. 2B is a block/flow diagram illustrating a method for enabling widescale data sharing among mobile applications in accordance with anembodiment of the present principles.

FIG. 3A is a diagram illustrating an exemplary communication schemebetween loosely coupled applications.

FIG. 3B is a diagram illustrating an exemplary communication schemebetween tightly coupled applications.

FIG. 3C is a diagram illustrating a communication scheme in whichloosely coupled applications utilize a materialized shared space topermit data sharing in accordance with an embodiment of the presentprinciples.

FIG. 4 is a block/flow diagram illustrating a sharing middleware systemfor enabling wide scale data sharing among mobile applications inaccordance with an embodiment of the present principles.

FIG. 5 is a diagram illustrating problems addressed by the sharingmiddleware system depicted in FIG. 4.

FIG. 6 is a block/flow diagram illustrating a system that includessupporting services to enhance data sharing among mobile applications inaccordance with one embodiment of the present principles.

FIG. 7 is a block/flow diagram illustrating a method for providing amobile context service in accordance with one embodiment of the presentprinciples.

FIG. 8 is a block/flow diagram illustrating operation of a mobileapplication which utilizes the recommendation service depicted in FIG.6.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

In accordance with the present principles, a mobile platform is providedwhich enables wide scale sharing among mobile applications. The mobileplatform, which may be implemented as part of a cloud infrastructure,includes a uniform communication framework that permits mobileapplications to communicate and share data in a consistent fashion.Mobile applications can communicate and share data with each other byissuing requests to a single application programming interface (API)implemented as part of the uniform communication framework residing onthe platform. By implementing sharing services at the platform in thecloud, mobile applications can avoid setting up separate APIs for eachapplication in the mobile environment for which data sharing is beingsought. Thus, sharing via the uniform communication framework caneliminate, or at least significantly reduce, overhead for mobileapplications that share data with other mobile applications.

The mobile platform includes a sharing middleware system to facilitateseamless sharing among the mobile applications. The sharing middlewaresystem includes a sharing negotiation tool which provides support formobile applications to set up a “materialized shared space” between twoor more applications. The materialized shared space permits a mobileapplication to access and update the underlying data associated withanother mobile application. The sharing negotiation tool is an offlinecomponent that facilitates a three-way sharing agreement to be reachedamong an application that shares its data (i.e., a “data owner”), anapplication which wants access to the underlying data of the data owner(i.e., a “data consumer”), and the platform provider.

The sharing middleware system also includes a capacity planningcomponent which ensures that Service Level Agreement (SLA) guaranteesare satisfied, and that sufficient access is provided to all data ownersand data consumers. By determining where the underlying data is storedfor both data owners and data consumers, the capacity planner candetermine how the data is to be organized or reorganized to satisfy SLAguarantees.

A set of complimentary services may be built on top of the sharingmiddleware system. One particularly advantageous service, referred to asa mobile context service, captures and utilizes parameters associatedwith a mobile user's physical and virtual environment. The mobilecontext service may collect data which indicates the time, position,location, situational context, social context, etc. of the mobile user.This information may be gathered from a plurality of different mobileapplications. Using this information, a mobile application can determinethe context in which the user is invoking the mobile application andmake intelligent assumptions in providing information to the mobileuser.

Other exemplary services which can complement the data sharing providedby the sharing middleware system may include a recommendation serviceand a business analytics service. A recommendation service may utilizecollaborative filtering to identify mobile users who are similar to eachother according to some criteria, and to provide recommendations to themobile users based on the similarities. A business analytics service mayprovide information to a mobile application developer to indicate orextract information about their client base, revenue, advertisementtargeting, etc. Other services may be provided as well.

While embodiments described herein may be described as facilitatingsharing among mobile applications, it should be recognized that thepresent principles can be applied to permit data sharing for anyapplication residing on a cloud.

Embodiments described herein may be entirely hardware, entirely softwareor including both hardware and software elements. In a preferredembodiment, the present invention is implemented in software, whichincludes but is not limited to firmware, resident software, microcode,etc.

Embodiments may include a computer program product accessible from acomputer-usable or computer-readable medium providing program code foruse by or in connection with a computer or any instruction executionsystem. A computer-usable or computer readable medium may include anyapparatus that stores, communicates, propagates, or transports theprogram for use by or in connection with the instruction executionsystem, apparatus, or device. The medium can be magnetic, optical,electronic, electromagnetic, infrared, or semiconductor system (orapparatus or device) or a propagation medium. The medium may include acomputer-readable storage medium such as a semiconductor or solid statememory, magnetic tape, a removable computer diskette, a random accessmemory (RAM), a read-only memory (ROM), a rigid magnetic disk and anoptical disk, etc.

A data processing system suitable for storing and/or executing programcode may include at least one processor coupled directly or indirectlyto memory elements through a system bus. The memory elements can includelocal memory employed during actual execution of the program code, bulkstorage, and cache memories which provide temporary storage of at leastsome program code to reduce the number of times code is retrieved frombulk storage during execution. Input/output or I/O devices (includingbut not limited to keyboards, displays, pointing devices, etc.) may becoupled to the system either directly or through intervening I/Ocontrollers.

Network adapters may also be coupled to the system to enable the dataprocessing system to become coupled to other data processing systems orremote printers or storage devices through intervening private or publicnetworks. Modems, cable modem and Ethernet cards are just a few of thecurrently available types of network adapters.

Referring now to the drawings in which like numerals represent the sameor similar elements and initially to FIG. 1, a mobile environment 100includes a plurality of mobile applications working together to create aseamless mobile experience for a user in accordance with an embodimentof the present principles. The mobile applications communicateseamlessly with each other and share information via a uniformcommunication framework 190.

The seamless mobile experience of the user starts when the user gets anemail with a conference invite. An email application 110 extracts theevent information (e.g., date, time and place of the conference) andpopulates a calendar in the email application 110 with the relevantinformation. At some point in the future when the mobile user invokes anairline booking application 115 to reserve plane tickets, the airlinebooking application 115 accesses the event information stored in thecalendar of the email application 110. Using this information, theairline booking application 115 may determine the approximate time framein which the user will be flying, the closest airports for bothdeparting and arriving flights, etc. The airline booking application 115can then present the user with a number of different flight optionswhich are available around the time of the conference, thus making itsimple and easy for the user to select a flight.

The mobile user's interaction with the airline ticket bookingapplication 115 is the first instance of a seamless mobile experience,which was facilitated by the sharing of information between the calendarin the email application 110 and the airline booking application 115 tomake the airline reservation process intuitive for the user. Of course,the user may want to fly on different dates, or use different airlines.This can be resolved by providing a suitable user interface whichpermits the user to alter the dates, the selected airlines or otherparameters. Thus, the goal of data sharing between the mobileapplications is not to be perfect (which of course would be the ultimategoal if possible). Rather, the present principles aim at providing adata sharing framework in which mobile applications are aware of thecontext in which the user is invoking the mobile applications.

Continuing with the example in FIG. 1, the user invokes a hotelreservation application 120 to reserve a hotel for the conference. Thehotel reservation application 120 obtains information from the calendarin the email application 110 and airline reservation application 115,and tries to present the user with hotel options that are proximate tothe conference venue and which are available on the same dates as theconference. For example, the hotel reservation application 120 mayextract the flight dates from the airline reservation application 115 todetermine the dates that a hotel will likely be needed, and may extractthe location of the conference from the calendar to search for hotels inthe neighboring area.

Next, the user invokes a taxi reservation application 125 to reserve ataxi ride to the airport. The taxi reservation application 125 obtainsthe information associated with the pick-up (e.g., the drop-offlocation, time of drop-off, etc.) from the previous mobile applications.When the user arrives at the airport and looks for restaurants to dine,the airport food application 130 presents the user with dining optionsin the same terminal in which the user is currently located. Optionally,the airport food application 130 may choose to omit particular foodoptions that the user has not preferred, or has indicated a dislike for,in the past.

The user may also utilize an in-flight movie application 135 to select amovie to be viewed during the flight. The in-flight movie application135 may request the name of the airline from the airline bookingapplication 115 to determine what movies are available by the particularairline. A movie may be selected, or options may be presented to theuser, based on the movies which are available by the particular airlineand a set of user preferences.

A terminal map application 140 may also be utilized at the airport toview a map (e.g., indicating store and bathroom locations) of theterminal from which the user will be departing. The terminal mapapplication 140 can access the flight information from the airlinebooking application 115 to determine the appropriate map which should bedisplayed to the user.

The remaining portions of FIG. 1 follow the same pattern as describedabove where the mobile applications provide a rich mobile experience tothe user by seamlessly sharing information and considering the contextin which the user is invoking the mobile applications. For example, thetaxi pickup application 125 can once again be used to reservetransportation between the airport and the hotel that was booked usingthe hotel booking application 120. A hotel registration application 145can be used to register the user upon arrival at the hotel which wasbooked using the hotel booking application 120.

At the conference, a networking application 150 can access the user'sinformation from the other applications in the mobile environment 100,and exchange user information with clients, associates, and others atthe conference. The user can even utilize a sightseeing application 155to schedule a tour of the destination at a time which is convenient forthe user.

It should be recognized that the seamless mobile experience describedwith reference to FIG. 1 is provided merely as an example, and can bevaried in numerous ways without departing from the scope of the presentprinciples. For example, the present principles are not limited to theparticular mobile applications (e.g., hotel booking application 120, theairline booking application 115, etc.) discussed in FIG. 1. In fact, thepresent principles can be applied to any mobile application. Likewise,the types of information or parameters exchanged in FIG. 1 are not to beconstrued as limiting. While the example in FIG. 1 involved sharingtext-based parameters, it should be recognized that any type ofinformation can be shared between the mobile applications including, butnot limited to, images, videos, audio files, executable files,databases, etc.

FIG. 2A is a block/flow diagram illustrating a platform as a service(PaaS) system 200 for enabling wide scale sharing among mobileapplications in accordance with one embodiment of the presentprinciples.

Mobile applications can be viewed as front-end applications which aredriven from remote services that are typically hosted on a cloud. Mostapplications require several kinds of services to be able to serve themobile user. For example, a mobile application typically relies on anapplication store (e.g., Apple™ Application store, Android™ market,etc.) to deploy the front-end of the application on mobile devices aswell as to provide support services (e.g., payment processing, downloadanalytics, etc.). Most of the applications also utilize data stores thatare hosted remotely on the Internet. In some cases, mobile applicationsalso utilize Software as a Service (SaaS) to provide search tools, maplayers, translation tools, etc.

A Platform as a Service (PaaS), e.g., as depicted in FIG. 2A, providesservices such as hosting, processing and querying of data for any mobileapplication that wishes to use its services. Since a PaaS 200 can hostdata from several different applications, the PaaS 200 is the mostappropriate place to build and implement a service for sharing amongmobile applications. By implementing sharing services as part of a PaaS200 (as opposed to implementing sharing services by separatelyconfiguring each individual mobile application to interact with anothermobile application), communication and data sharing among theapplications can be provided as a service with little or no overhead tothe applications. Sharing adds value to the parties involved in terms ofproviding access to richer information about the mobile user.

It may be important to be able to uniquely identify the consumers of themobile services to ensure that the data associated with the sharingservice is delivered to the proper destination. One useful feature thatfacilitates sharing is the consistent nature in which mobileapplications can identify a mobile device or mobile user with a smallset of key identifiers (e.g., phone number, device ID or SIM card ID). Asingle user can be tracked across several different devices using a keyidentifier. For example, consider a case in which a single user usesmultiple mobile devices in different contexts (e.g., a cell phone forwork and a cell phone for personal use). The key identifiers associatedwith each of those mobile devices can be associated with a single user.Thus, using the key identifiers, the PaaS 200 can identify all devicesassociated with a user and permit sharing among the devices to provide aricher experience to the user.

In a PaaS setting, mobile applications that use the PaaS to host theirdata are referred to as “tenants.” A PaaS system 200 may host severaltenants in the same cloud infrastructure (referred to as“multi-tenancy”) to provide for good resource usage and spread theoperation costs among several tenants. To ensure that all tenants getreasonable service, tenants may utilize Service Level Agreements (SLA)agreements with the PaaS 200.

In general, a SLA is a contract that describes the level of serviceprovided to a user on the data hosted on a PaaS. For example, a SLA canspecify that a tenant pays ten cents for queries responded within 300milliseconds (ms), while the tenant would penalize the PaaS provider twodollars if the execution time for the query ever exceeded 300 ms. A PaaS200, whose objective is to maximize profits, ensures that sufficientresources are available so that tenants do not miss their SLA deadlinestoo often since that results in loss of revenue. A good measure ofperformance for a PaaS infrastructure is how many queries are answeredin a unit time (i.e., throughput), or the profit which is beinggenerated for the PaaS 200. In this context, the PaaS provider is muchlike a system administrator who ensures the infrastructure operates atits peak throughput.

The exemplary PaaS system 200 illustrated in FIG. 2A is built on top ofa cloud infrastructure. The PaaS 200 includes a data store 270, adatabase coordinator 220 for managing the computing infrastructure, aquery processing engine 260 for dispatching and scheduling queries onthe data store 270, and a sharing middleware 250.

The sharing middleware 250 provides an infrastructure for mobileapplications to actively share data with one another. For example, thesharing middleware 250 can enable sharing between a tenant t, who is the“owner” of the data and another tenant, referred to as a “consumer”, whowants access to t′s data.

For purposes of simplicity, this description primarily describes thescenario in which the consumer is also a tenant in the PaaS system 200.However, it should be recognized that this need not be the case. Thatis, the present principles can be applied to provide sharing between atenant residing on PaaS 200 and a consumer which does not reside on thePaaS 220. For example, this can be accomplished by setting up aninterface for the consumer to communicate with the API 230 of the PaaSsystem 200. Further details regarding the infrastructure and operationof the sharing middleware 250 are described below with reference to FIG.4.

Mobile applications 205 send requests, updates or queries forinformation stored in the data store 270 via an API 230 which provideslanguage support for one or more of types of request. For example,referring back to FIG. 1, a mobile application (e.g., a hotel bookingapplication 120 in FIG. 1) may send a request for information collectedby another mobile application (e.g., an airline booking application115). In certain embodiments, the request can represent a StructuredQuery Language (SQL) query or a Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) query.The API 230 provides a communication gateway which can be accessed bymobile applications 205 in a uniform manner. A single protocol may beutilized by all applications. By implementing a single, uniform API 230at the PaaS 200, as opposed to setting up separate APIs for eachapplication, a more efficient sharing scheme is provided.

The queries or updates received by the API 230 may be forwarded to thedatabase coordinator 220 and the query translator 263. The databasecoordinator 220 and associated sub-components collect information aboutthe queries sent by the mobile applications 205. The databasecoordinator 220 analyzes this information to determine query patternsand to determine an appropriate allocation of resources to satisfy thequeries for the mobile applications 205.

A workload analyzer 224 can determine the size of workloads for thetenants and consumers, as well as an aggregated workload for PaaSplatform 200. Specifically, the workload analyzer 224 can determine thetypes of queries which are made for each of these entities, as well asthe rate at which the queries are made. The workload data may indicateboth current workload data and historical workload data for theseentities. This workload information can be useful for performing avariety of different tasks, such as the tasks performed by the capacityplanner 225 or the run-time optimizer 221.

The capacity planner 225 performs capacity planning operations whichensure that SLA guarantees are met, and that sufficient access isprovided to all tenants and consumers (so long as their workloads do notvary drastically and suddenly). The capacity planner 225 abstractsknowledge indicating where data is stored for both the tenants andconsumers, and determines how the data is to be organized or reorganizedto satisfy SLA guarantees. The decisions regarding the organization orreorganization of data may be based, at least in part, on the queryworkload data provided by the workload analyzer 224.

The run-time optimizer 221 determines the order in which queries will beexecuted during run-time. The scheduling of queries may be based uponcertain criteria. In one embodiment, the run-time optimizer 221optimizes query scheduling in a manner which maximizes throughput (i.e.,maximizes the number queries which are answered in a unit time). Asexplained above, this may also result in maximizing profits for the PaaSsystem 200.

The database coordinator 220 forwards queries and requests to the queryprocessing engine 260. The query processing engine 260 identifies theinformation in the data store 270 which the mobile application isattempting to access via the request, and determines whether the mobileapplication has permission to access the information based on SLA termsassociated with the mobile application.

Specifically, the query processing engine 260 comprises a querytranslator 263, a SLA-aware dispatcher 261, and a query scheduler 262.The query translator 263 can perform distributed operations in the sensethat it permits tables from multiple distributed relational databases tobe queried as if there were multiple tables in a single database. Thequery translator 263 turns user queries and data modification commandsinto a query plan, i.e., a sequence of operations on the database. Thequery plan identifies the precise information in the data store 270 thatis being requested by a mobile application, or which is the subject ofan update.

The SLA-aware dispatcher 261 provides access control to the informationin the data store 270 based on SLA terms stored in the system monitordatabase 226. For example, a SLA agreement 210 between a PaaS providerand a consumer may specify an amount of bandwidth that the consumer isto be provided, or may specify that a PaaS provider is to respond toqueries by the consumer within a specified time interval. The SLA-awaredispatcher 261 can ensure that these terms are being satisfied.

The SLA-aware dispatcher 261 may also control access to the underlyingdata in the data store 270. For example, a data owning application mayspecify that a consumer can access a subset of its data, and mayprohibit the consumer from accessing other portions of its data (e.g.,credit card information, social security numbers, etc.). To this end,the SLA-aware dispatcher 261 may provide access control by ensuring thatthe consumer only accesses the appropriate data.

If the SLA-aware dispatcher 261 determines that requests issued by aconsumer mobile application are not being satisfied within the sharingterms specified in the SLA agreement 210 between the consumer and theowner, the SLA-aware dispatcher 261 will notify the system monitordatabase 226. Otherwise, if SLA terms are being satisfied, the requestand associated query plan are forwarded to the query scheduler 262.

The query scheduler 262 implements the actual scheduling of queries forexecution on the data store 270. The query scheduler 262 may schedulethe queries in accordance with optimization scheme derived by therun-time optimizer 221 to maximize throughput.

The multi-tenancy manager 222 ensures that a few “hard-hitting” tenantsor consumers (i.e., tenants or consumers which send queries or receivequeries at a high rate) do not terribly affect the performance of alltenants in the system. The multi-tenancy manager 222 can significantlyreduce the negative impact of hard-hitting tenants on others by“isolating” the tenants from one another and from the consumers. Toisolate tenants and consumers appropriately, the multi-tenancy manager222 can identify all the tenants and consumers in the PaaS system 200,and communicate with the run-time optimizer 221 to ensure that therun-time scheduling of queries provides a reasonable measure ofperformance isolation.

The cluster controller 223 controls operation of the underlying serversof the PaaS platform 200. For example, as the demands and workloads ofthe systems vary, the cluster controller 223 can turn servers on/off,consolidate information on the servers, migrate data between servers,etc.

The seamless mobility and sharing provided by the exemplary PaaSplatform 200 in FIG. 2A is facilitated by the sharing and communicationframework 190. All applications interface with the platform 200 in auniform manner, i.e., via the API 230. The sharing middleware 250provides a suitable framework which permits mobile applications toaccess each other's underlying data. This type of communication andsharing is far from what currently exists in the state of the art.Despite the fact that a large variety of applications are currentlyavailable on mobile devices, the applications generally do not talk toone another, let alone create a seamless mobile experience. Rather,communication between applications is “ad hoc” in the sense that thereis no real support to enable these communications. This is demonstratedby the information sharing schemes illustrated in FIGS. 3A-3C.

FIGS. 3A, 3B and 3C depict three different scenarios for sharinginformation among mobile applications. In FIGS. 3A-3C, assume there isinformation sharing between two applications, i.e., App-A and App-B.Specifically, assume that only App-A, who is the data owner, agrees toshare data with App-B, who is the consumer. As an example, App-A mayrepresent a calendar application, while App-B may represent an airlineticket booking service. In order to search for suitable travel deals andprovide the present the deals to the user, App-B wants to make use ofApp-A's information to determine when the mobile user is traveling.FIGS. 3A-3C depict three different scenarios which can provide App-Bwith access to App-A's data.

FIG. 3A illustrates an information sharing scenario 310 in which App-Ais loosely coupled with App-B via an API which has been setup for App-A.In this scenario, an API is created for App-A to share some of its datawith App-B. The data made available to App-B is determined by theimplementation of App-A's API.

There are several drawbacks with this sharing scheme. First, the twoapplications both have to add functionalities. That is, App-A would haveto add an API to allow access to its data and App-B would have to add aninterface to access the data. Each time App-A's underlying data layoutis changed (e.g., as the result of updates to the application), the APIfor App-A would have to be updated. The problem becomes much worse whenmore than two applications are involved. If k applications want tocommunicate with one another, each application would have to implementinterfaces to k−1 APIs, in addition to setting up its own API.

Another disadvantage of the information sharing scheme 310 in FIG. 3A isthat accessing data via an API which has been specifically designed forApp-A is an inefficient way for App-B to access App-A's data. This isespecially true if both App-A and App-B reside on the same systemplatform. Even further, App-B may not be satisfied with the access tothe data because App-A's API may not be expressive enough for App-B'sneeds.

FIG. 3B illustrates an information sharing scenario 320 in which themobile applications are tightly coupled to each other. In this case,App-A permits App-B to access its data directly. App-B can accessApp-A's data as if it were App-B's own data.

The drawback of this scenario 320 is that it leads to a tight couplingbetween App-A and App-B in the sense that if App-A changes the layout ofits underlying data, App-A has to coordinate these changes with App-B.Thus, in the case where App-A shares with a large number ofapplications, the appropriate changes would have to be coordinated witheach application.

There are other issues with this type of sharing that are specific to aPaaS system (e.g., the PaaS in FIG. 2A). For example, if App-B is aheavy utilizer of App-A's data, this may cause App-A to frequently missthe SLA deadlines on its own data. Similarly, if App-A widely shares itsdata with several other consumers, the access on the shared data may beexceedingly poor for all the parties involved.

FIG. 3C illustrates an information sharing scenario 330 in which mobileapplications are loosely coupled and utilize a materialized shared space350 to streamline the process of sharing data in the cloud. The sharingmiddleware 250 (e.g., in FIGS. 2 and 4) preferably implements sharingamong mobile applications in accordance with the scenario 330 depictedin FIG. 3C.

In this scenario, the PaaS 200 invests resources (e.g., memory, CPU,bandwidth, network usage, etc.) to ensure that all mobile applications(both owners and consumers) receive reasonable access to data stored inthe data store 270. Specifically, the PaaS has setup a “materializedshared space” 350 for App-B, which ensures that App-B's access on theshared space does not significantly affect App-A's queries.

The task of deciding the amount of resources to allocate to thematerialized shared space 350 to facilitate sharing may be performed bythe capacity planner 225 in FIG. 2A. Capacity planning ensures goodaccess to all the tenants and consumers. Sharing in a multi-tenancy caseemploys active runtime query scheduling to ensure that there issufficient performance isolation between the tenants and the consumersin the PaaS.

FIG. 2B is a block/flow diagram illustrating a method 290 for enablingwide scale data sharing among mobile applications in accordance with anembodiment of the present principles.

The method begins in block 291 a determination is made regarding theappropriate amount of resources to be allocated to a materialized sharedspace 350 in a cloud. This decision may be based, at least in part,upon, the workload size of the tenant and consumer applications whichare seeking to share data with each other.

Next, in block 292, a materialized shared space 350 is established in acloud in which the tenant application resides. The materialized sharedspace 350 includes a set of resources (e.g., memory, CPU, bandwidth,network usage, etc.) allocated by a PaaS to permit data sharing betweena tenant application and at least one consumer application.

At least one consumer application is provided with access to the data inthe materialized shared space 350 to permit data sharing between thetenant application and at least one consumer application (block 293).The materialized shared space 350 permits the at least one consumerapplication to view and perform operations on the underlying data of thetenant application (e.g., read the data, perform queries on the data orissue data updates).

FIG. 4 illustrates an exemplary sharing middleware system 250. For thesake of simplicity, assume that only a data owner can perform updates onthe data, and that consumers only have read access on the data. However,it should be recognized that other embodiments of the sharing middlewaresystem 250 may include modifications which permit consumers to updatethe underlying data of data owning applications. Moreover, it should benoted that while the negotiation sharing tool 410 described herein isdescribed as facilitating sharing between three parties (i.e., a dataowner, a data consumer and a PaaS provider), appropriate modificationscan be made to allow data owners to setup wide scale sharing of theirdatasets with any number of owners and consumers.

The sharing middleware 250 includes a sharing negotiation tool 410 whichprovides support for tenants to set up shared datasets in a materializedshared space 350 (e.g., as depicted in FIG. 3C). The sharing negotiationtool 410 is an offline component that facilitates an agreement to bereached between the data owner, the data consumer and the PaaS provider.

The PaaS provider has in an interest in promoting sharing agreementsbetween the owner and the consumer, since increased data sharing leadsto more queries on the PaaS, which in turn leads to more revenue for thePaaS provider. To facilitate data sharing, the PaaS provider mayrequest, or even require, that all tenants wishing to enter into sharingarrangements describe their schema, relations, and attributes. Usingthis information, the view discoverer 411 can provide a search interfacewhich would permit consumers to search for a dataset matching theirneeds.

The sharing process usually starts with the consumer requesting accessto the data. To do this, the consumer may issue a sharing request to thedata owner via the three-party negotiation tool 414. Using thethree-party negotiation tool 414, the data owner can respond by denyingthe request, or respond by identifying a subset of data that the ownerwould be willing to share with the consumer.

To streamline communication between an owner and a consumer, the ownermay be permitted to set flags which indicate a particular portion orsubset of data which is available for sharing, as well as the data whichis not be available for sharing under any circumstances. The data forwhich the owner has not indicated a preference can be left open fornegotiation. In particular, the consumer and the owner can go back andforth, until they both agree on a sharing arrangement. Furthermore, incertain embodiments, a data owner can provide standard access templatesvia the negotiation sharing tool 410 to any consumer wanting access tothe owner's data.

The role of the PaaS provider during this initial negotiation process isa passive one. Usually, sharing between an owner and consumer involvesadditional investment to the computing infrastructure. Thus, during thisinitial part of the negotiation process, the PaaS provider can utilizethe three-party negotiation tool 414 to offer incentives and helpfulsuggestions to the owner and consumer in order to ensure that a sharingarrangement is reached.

The sharing negotiation tool 410 provides for data sharing under severallevels of granularity. For example, the owner can share an entiredatabase, a few relations, or even a few attributes spread acrossseveral relations. To enforce restrictions on data sharing, theSLA-aware negotiator 261 can implement access controls on the shareddata. For example, access controls can be placed on the tuples of theshared relations to restrict attribute ranges would be available to theconsumer. Thus, if a consumer attempted to access restricted informationthat falls outside the shared attribute range, the SLA-aware dispatcher261 would identify the request and prohibit the query from beingexecuted on the data store 270.

Once the owner and consumer have reached an agreement as to the datawhich is to be shared, the SLA negotiator 412 can be utilized tonegotiate a SLA with the consumer, as well as to negotiate performanceisolation policies with the data owner. The SLA agreement between thePaaS provider and the consumer can specify the level of service that theconsumer expects to receive on the data. There may be a few standard SLAtemplates that the PaaS would make available to consumers. As theconsumer chooses a SLA on the shared space, the PaaS provider can ensurethat the SLA just negotiated with the consumer is satisfied in the faceof SLAs negotiated with other consumers and data owners. To make thisdecision, the PaaS provider may consider the query workload on theshared data, as well as performance isolation policies requested by thedata owner.

After these SLA and isolation policy negotiations have been settled, thePaaS provider creates a materialized shared space 350 for the consumerto access the data being shared by the owner. The materialized sharedspace 350 may include a block of memory storage which is reserved by thePaaS provider to permit sharing between the tenant and consumer. Forexample, the PaaS provider may determine the data which is to be sharedby the data owner, and copy this information to a block of memory whichis accessible by the consumer or consumers who have entered into anagreement with the PaaS provider.

A sharing view 413 of the materialized shared space 350 permits theconsumer to view and perform operations (e.g., issue queries) on theshared datasets. The sharing view 413, which is exposed as a schema withrelations and attributes, may not have any bearing on how the data isactually mapped to the owner's schema. Rather, the sharing view 413 maypresent the owner's data to the consumer in a manner which is customizedby the consumer. Consumers may be permitted to stitch attributestogether from multiple relations, as well as other data reorganizationoperations, to form their own virtual view of shared data. Of course,not all combinations of the attributes are valid. For example, it may beprohibited to put together two attributes that do not have a commonprimary key. The query translator 263 of the query processing engine 260enforces these constraints.

The sharing view 413 presented to the consumer ensures that access to arelation or attribute in the sharing view 413 is mapped to the correctdatabase and associated relations. This would not be a hard problem ifthe sharing view is a static one. However, this is not the case sincethe PaaS 200 constantly reorganizes data in trying to accommodate newtenants and consumers. As a consequence of this type of dynamism, thesharing view 413 has to keep abreast with the latest configuration ofthe data in the PaaS 200 to ensure that queries made on the sharing view413 by the consumer are mapped correctly.

The capacity planner 225 can determine the appropriate type, size andamount of resources (e.g., size of memory reserved, reserved CPUutilization, etc.) that should be allocated to setup a materializedshared space 350 in accordance with the SLA terms. Recall that alltenants in the PaaS 200 can negotiate a client-based SLA on theirdataset, while consumers negotiate a shared SLA on the sharing view 413.The primary challenge faced by the sharing middleware 250 in thisscenario involves maintaining multiple shared SLAs on a sharing view 413in view of the various client SLAs on the data. It is conceivable thatthere can be tens, hundreds, or even more of SLAs on a single sharingview 413. The capacity planner 225 can employ a number of differentmeasures to ensure that SLAs on the shared data are fulfilled.

In one embodiment, the PaaS provider abstracts the knowledge of wherethe data is stored from both the tenants and consumers. Using thisinformation the PaaS provider can reorganize the data without having towork in coordination with the tenants and consumers. Moreover, the PaaSprovider has in its disposal the query workload of tenant and consumersof a dataset. This means that the PaaS provider has an idea of whattypes of queries would be made against the materialized shared space350, as well as the rate at which the queries would be made. Of course,this prior knowledge of queries may not account for fluctuations in theworkload. However, the capacity planner 225 can utilize this priorknowledge to perform capacity planning and determine how the datasetsare to be organized or reorganized.

To implement measures which account for the situation in which datasetsmay be accessed by hundreds or even thousands of hard hitting consumers,the PaaS provider may forsake some of the ACID properties (i.e.,atomicity, consistency, isolation, durability) on the shared data toensure access. This may only be possible in the case where the consumersusing the sharing view 413 are not overly sensitive to those ACIDproperties that are being sacrificed.

There are several strategies that sharing middleware 250 can employ whena dataset has several consumers with different SLA specifications. Allthese approaches take into account the trade-off between expending morestorage to obtain increased throughput (i.e., the number of queries thatcan be made against the dataset in a unit time).

In accordance with one embodiment, if a static shared dataset (i.e., adataset which does not change) is heavily accessed by several hardhitting consumers, the replication manager 420 can replicate thedataset. If the dataset has two identical copies on two differentcomputing resources, it is possible to get double the throughput on thedata. In some cases, it may be preferable to only replicate a subset ofthe shared dataset (e.g., only replicate a few relations, attributes,indices, or selected ranges of tuples from a few relations).

In certain scenarios, replication is not such an attractive option. Forexample, if a large quantity of updates is made against the data, itwould be expensive for the sharing middleware 250 to keep bothreplicated copies consistent. Moreover, as the number copies of thedataset increase, the cost of keeping them consistent also increasesconsiderably.

The sharing middleware 250 makes use of the replication manager 420 tomaintain several asynchronous, replicated copies of datasets or portionsof datasets. The replication manager 420 replays transaction logs fromone copy on to the other, thereby creating and maintaining consistentcopies. Of course, there is a small delay before an update made on onedatabase is propagated to the other copies. This delay does not affectmost applications.

However, for some applications (e.g., banking applications) thisshort-lived inconsistency between copies may not be acceptable. Tohandle this problem, one copy of the data (i.e., the master copy) can beused to perform all updates, while the other copies (i.e., the slavecopies) are replications of the first one obtained by replaying the logsfrom the master copy on to the slave copies. Critical queries thatcannot tolerate inconsistencies, can be given preferential access to themaster copy, while the queries that are tolerant of inconsistencies canutilize the slave copies. This type of dynamic query scheduling can behandled by the query scheduler 262 by providing the query scheduler 262with information indicating the specific application needs.

FIG. 5 illustrates particular issues which are accounted for by thesharing middleware 250 to provide for sharing between mobileapplications. The capacity planning problem can be defined as follows.Assume that the PaaS infrastructure includes m computing nodes R₁ . . .R_(m). A node R_(i) has a computing capacity of C_(i) and a storagecapacity of S_(i), such that computing and storage capacities areexpressed using some suitable measure. Note that such a description ofthe computing resources in a cloud represents an over-simplification ofthe problem. However, it is sufficient to expose the complexity of thesharing problem.

Assume that T={t₁−t_(n)} is the set of n tenants, such that d_(i) is thedatabase of tenant t_(i), which needs storage s_(i) as well as c_(i)computing resources. Further assume that a database d_(i) is assigned tothe computing node R_(j) using a suitable method. Let DB (R_(i)) be theset of databases that are hosted on R_(i). CP (R_(i))=Σ_(i=1) ^(|DB)^((Ri)) ^(|) is defined as the capacity consumption of D_(i)εDB_((R)_(i) ₎. Similarly, SZ(R_(i))=Σ_(i=1) ^(|DB) ^((Ri)) ^(|) is defined asthe storage consumption of D_(i)εDB_((R) _(i) ₎. For the properfunctioning of the PaaS infrastructure, there is ∀iε1 . . . m,CP(R_(i))≦C_(i) and SZ(R_(i))≦S_(i). In other words, the size of thedatabases and computing resources consumed should not be more than whatis available at a node. Note that even such a simple formulation ofassigning tenants to computing resources is a NP-hard problem as it canbe abstracted to the “bin packing” problem.

Consider a live PaaS system where all the databases have been assignedto computing resources. Now, two tenants in the system enter into asharing arrangement. This means that the PaaS provider may have toreassign some of the databases to accommodate an additional consumer inthe infrastructure. Let us assume that tenant t_(i), which is currentlyhosted in R_(i) has a new consumer u^(t) ^(i) , such that it consumes acomputing capacity of c^(t) ^(i) . If the addition of consumer u^(t)^(i) overloads the computational capacity of R_(i) (i.e., C(R_(i))+c^(t)^(i) >C_(i)), then D_(i) has to be replicated on another resource, whichconsumes a storage capacity of s_(i) as well as a small computingoverhead in order to maintain both the copies in an consistent manner.If tenant t_(i) can tolerate a small downtime of its database, then wecould simply migrate D_(i) to another computing node R_(j).

In some cases, the schema of D_(i) may not be so conducive for aconsumer u^(t) ^(i) . The problem of accommodating u^(t) ^(i) is not assimple as finding another computing node that has enough space toaccommodate D_(i). In some cases, if no node exists which canaccommodate D_(i), multiple databases may have to be migrated beforeD_(i) can be assigned to a computing resource. In any case, all of theabove formulations of the problem are a variant of “online bin packing,”which is also known to be NP-hard. As an alternative, heuristic basedsolutions can be used at every step, but they may lead to non-optimalsolutions which progressively get more and more suboptimal as consumersare added to the PaaS.

Now, consider the problem of run-time optimization of queries in thePaaS system. Look at one computing node R_(i), which hosts databasesDB(R_(i)). Assume that there is only one copy of the database (i.e., noreplication) for the sake of simplicity of the query scheduling problem.Let Q denote the set of queries that are currently waiting to beprocessed on DB(R_(i)). Let Q_(i)εQ be an input query with an SLA ofSLA_(i), such that PR(SLA_(i)) is the profit in executing withinTI(SLA_(i))time. It is assumed that R_(i) can only process one query ata time. Therefore, it needs to be determined which query Q_(i) in Q isto be executed next in order to maximize profit.

Consider a simple case, where a greedy strategy fails. Suppose twoqueries Q_(i), Q_(j)εQ, such that PR(SLA_(i))>PR(SLA_(j)) andTI(SLA_(i))>TI(SLA_(j)) are waiting to be processed. A greedy approachwould try to schedule Q_(i), before Q_(j) as Q_(i) results in moreprofit, but it may cause Q_(j) to miss its SLA deadlines. However, itmay be that Q_(i) could be executed before Q_(i), while ensuring thatboth Q_(j) and Q_(i) do not miss their SLA deadlines, which would bringmore profit to the PaaS provider. Hence, the problem of run timescheduling of queries is inherently NP-hard as it can also be cast asvariants of the bin-packing problem.

Sharing brings about another layer of complexity to an already hardproblem, which makes the architecture of the sharing middleware 250 aninteresting technical challenge. Consider once again the sharingrelationship between App-A and App-B as described above with referenceto FIGS. 3A-3C. The sharing middleware 250 may implement one of thefollowing policies to handle queries from consumers vis-a-vis tenants.

(1) Consumers are Equal Policy: App-A does not need the PaaS 200 totreat consumer queries any differently from how its own queries arescheduled. In other words, App-A relies on its SLA with the PaaS 200 toensure that it would have good access to its own data.

(2) Consumers Always Next Policy: App-A could have consumers of App-A(like App-B) not affect access on the data of App-A. This means that ifApp-A and App-B's queries are waiting for access to a resource, App-Arelies on the PaaS 220 to ensure that none of its queries miss SLAdeadlines due to App-B's queries.

(3) Consumers Always Last Policy: App-A could demand an even higherlevel of service in the sense that it could stipulate that none of itsqueries miss their SLA dead-lines due to any other consumer, even if theconsumer is not in a sharing arrangement with App-A. In this scenario,the PaaS 200 may invest more resources in order to provide thisperformance isolation.

If tenants and consumer queries are viewed the same (i.e., Consumers areEqual Policy), then scheduling queries in this case is not differentfrom the formulation of the problem discussed above. However, supposethat a tenant is guaranteed that sharing would not cause any of theirqueries to fail (i.e., Consumers Always Next Policy). In particular,Q_(i) is the query from a tenant t_(i) and Q_(j) is a query from theconsumer of t_(i), such that both Q_(i) and Q_(j) are in Q. In thiscase, the above policy is satisfied (1) if Q_(j) is scheduled afterQ_(i), (2) if Q_(j) is scheduled after a provided Q_(i) is guaranteed tomeet the SLA requirement as well, or (3) if Q_(j) is executed when a isguaranteed not to meet the SLA deadline regardless of whether Q_(j) isexecuted or not. The “Consumers Always Policy” stipulates that consumerqueries are executed only if it does not affect the execution of atenant. This would be similar to the second policy, except for the factthat Q_(j) can belong to any consumer in the system.

FIG. 6 is a block/flow diagram illustrating a PaaS system 600 thatincludes a set of supporting services in accordance with one embodimentof the present principles.

As explained above, providing a scheme which provides for sharing amongmobile applications hosted on a PaaS 600 can create a seamless mobileexperience for the mobile user. Furthermore, the sharing middleware 250will create many opportunities for various SaaS offerings to be built ontop of the PaaS to provide further support for the mobile applications.FIG. 6 illustrates three exemplary SaaS offerings which may be used tosupport the sharing middleware 250. Each of these is described below.

The first service is a mobile context service 610. The “mobile context”of a user can generally refers to a “rich information vector” thatcaptures the important elements of the real world environment in amanner which is specific to the current condition of the mobile user. Anumber of different context parameters can be used to indicate ordiscern the mobile context of a user. For example, the mobile context ofa user may be determined from a combination of context parameters whichindicate the time, position, location, situational context, socialcontext, etc. of the mobile user. In fact, any piece of information thatis relevant to the current state of the mobile user can be used as acontext parameter to determine the mobile context of a user. The mobilecontext of a user is highly dynamic and will change as the environmentof the user changes.

Mobile context could be implemented as a service on top of the sharingmiddleware 250 which can be utilized by all applications in the cloud.Consider the scenario where a mobile user who is waiting for a flight atan airport utilizes a mobile restaurant application which provides theuser with a list of nearby restaurants. The restaurant application canutilize the mobile context service 610 to determine an appropriate setof restaurants to present to the user. For example, the restaurantapplication may utilize the mobile context service 610 to gather contextparameters about the current environment of the user to tailor the listof restaurants which is presented to the user.

In this scenario, since the mobile user is located in an airport, it islikely that the mobile user will only be interested in those restaurantswhich are located in the same airport terminal. The mobile contextservice 610 may gather parameters indicating the location of the userusing a global positioning system (GPS) application, thereby determiningthat the user is at the airport. In addition, the mobile context service610 may gather parameters from an airline booking application whichindicates the airline, terminal, and flight time of the user. Usingthese context parameters from the GPS application and the airlinebooking application, the restaurant application or the actual mobilecontext service 610 itself can determine the mobile context of the user.The list of restaurants presented to the user is based upon this mobilecontext. Thus, based on the mobile context of the user in this example,a list of restaurants may be presented to the user which only includesrestaurants that are located in the specific terminal where the user iswaiting for his flight.

As illustrated by the example above, the mobile context service 610 canprovide a mobile application with mobile context information gatheredfrom various other applications to permit the mobile application totailor the information which is being presented to the user. In otherwords, a mobile application can adapt the information presented to auser in accordance with the mobile context of the user based on theinformation gathered from different mobile applications.

Applications can utilize mobile context via the mobile context service610 to provide a rich experience to the user as demonstrated by theexample provided in FIG. 1. Building a mobile context service 610 mayinvolve extensive sharing between several mobile applications in orderto provide information about a mobile user which is rich enough tocapture the state of the user. For the purposes of simplicity, it can beassumed that the identity of the mobile user is the same across all themobile applications hosted in a PaaS 600.

There are many issues that make it appropriate for the mobile contextservice 610 to be implemented as a separate service. For example, it iswould be quite time-consuming for individual applications to queryhundreds of shared datasets made available by all of the participatingapplications on the PaaS 600 in order to gather current informationpertinent to a mobile user. It would be much more efficient if theapplications could query a single service (i.e., the mobile contextservice 610) which is configured to aggregate all of the informationavailable on a mobile user from the applications residing on the PaaS600. For example, the mobile context service 610 could periodicallyretrieve updated position information for mobile users from maps andnavigational applications, events from calendar or schedulingapplications, social connections from social networking applications,etc. This is information can then be stored in one place and madeaccessible by the mobile context service 610.

Further benefits are associated with the fact that differentapplications may store data in different schema formats. Thus, a mobilecontext service 610 that provides the data in a consistent schema, whileabstracting away the schema of the applications that contributed thedata, would be very useful.

FIG. 7 illustrates an exemplary method 700 for providing a mobilecontext service 610. The method beings in block 710 where contextparameters associated with a user from a plurality of applications aregathered. As explained above, the context parameters may indicate thelocation of the user, the social context of the user (e.g., whether theuser is at a concert, attending a networking event, etc.), the time ofday in the time zone in which the user is located, etc. In oneembodiment, a mobile application can query other mobile applicationsdirectly to retrieve the context parameters. However, in a preferredembodiment, the context parameters are gathered by a centralized mobilecontext service 610 which is external to the mobile applications.

Next, in block 720, the mobile context of the user is determined basedon the context parameters which have been gathered. The mobile contextof the user may represent a snapshot of the user's environment (e.g.,including location, time, social context, etc.) at a certain point intime.

In block 730, a mobile application adapts content which is to bepresented to the user based on the mobile context of the user. Theexample discussed above involving the restaurant application indicateshow a list of restaurants provided to a user can be adapted orcustomized based on the mobile context of the user.

After the content to be presented to the user is customized according tothe mobile context of the user, the content is presented to the user viathe mobile application (block 740). Since the mobile context of a useris highly dynamic and can change in time, the mobile context service 610or the mobile application can query mobile applications for updatedcontext parameters (block 750) to ensure that the mobile context of theuser is periodically updated.

A recommendation service 620 may also be built on top of the PaaS whichcan provide support to mobile applications by offering recommendationfeatures in the applications. One exemplary recommendation technique isreferred to as “collaborative filtering”. Collaborative filtering isbased on finding users that are similar and providing recommendationsbased on the similarities between the users.

For example, consider FIG. 8 which illustrates a shopping application800 which utilizes the recommendation service 620 to providerecommendations to customers. Assume that the shopping application 800maintains a database of its users and their purchase histories, and thattwo users are considered “similar”, if their past purchases overlapsignificantly. A, B, C and D denote mobile users which utilize theshopping application 800. Each mobile user is associated with one ormore items which have been purchased by the mobile user. The items aredenoted by I.

In this example, the recommendation service 620 determines that A and Bare similar users because of their purchases significantly overlap.Consequently, the recommendation service 620 may recommend items that Bhas purchased in the past to A assuming that A has not yet purchased theitem. On the other hand, the recommendation service 620 also determinesthat A and C are dissimilar users. Therefore, the recommendation service620 does not recommend items purchased by A to C, or vice versa.

Consider another example in which a movie ticket booking applicationstores information about the tickets purchased by mobile users, and atelevision streaming application stores television viewing preferencesof mobile users. When a user of the TV application signs up with themovie application, the movie application can bootstrap the mobile user'spreference by obtaining the similarity information with respect to userswho utilize both services. That is, the mobile user's profile can bedescribed as being similar to a set of mobile users, but dissimilar toanother set of mobile users, such that the mobile users in both of thesets are those who already use both the applications. The recommendationservice 620 could use the sharing middleware 250 to bootstrap arecommendation procedure by sharing user similarity information with oneanother.

Referring back to FIG. 6, a business analytics service 630 may also beincluded as part of the PaaS 600. The business analytics service 630 mayprovide a mobile application developer with a number of different usefultools. For example, the business analytics service 630 may provide aninsight into the desires of their client base, determine the performanceof a mobile application, identify new potential clients, provideback-end support services, and indicate features of a mobile applicationwhich are inadequate or which need to be updated. To provide these toolsto a developer, business analytics service 630 may utilize the sharingmiddleware 250 to access analytical information (e.g., server usage,memory usage, CPU usage, number of client queries, etc.), paymentinformation or other business-related information associated with one ormore mobile applications.

It should be recognized that the present principles are not limited tothe particular services 610, 620 and 630 described above. Rather,numerous other types of services may also be built on top of the PaaS600 in accordance with the present principles.

Having described preferred embodiments of a system and method forproviding mobile computing services (which are intended to beillustrative and not limiting), it is noted that modifications andvariations can be made by persons skilled in the art in light of theabove teachings. It is therefore to be understood that changes may bemade in the particular embodiments disclosed which are within the scopeof the invention as outlined by the appended claims. Having thusdescribed aspects of the invention, with the details and particularityrequired by the patent laws, what is claimed and desired protected byLetters Patent is set forth in the appended claims.

1. A system for data sharing, comprising: a platform as a service (PaaS)configured to setup a materialized shared space in a cloud, thematerialized shared space including a set of resources invested by thePaaS to permit data sharing between a tenant application and at leastone consumer application; and a sharing middleware configured to providethe at least one consumer application with access to the data in thematerialized shared space.
 2. The system as recited in claim 1, furthercomprising a capacity planner configured to determine an appropriateamount of resources to be allocated to the materialized shared space. 3.The system as recited in claim 2, wherein the capacity planner isfurther configured to determine an organization of the data being sharedby the tenant application.
 4. The system as recited in claim 1, furthercomprising a workload analyzer configured to determine a workload sizefor each consumer application and for each tenant application.
 5. Thesystem as recited in claim 5, wherein the workload size is based on aquery rate and query type.
 6. The system as recited in claim 1, furthercomprising a run-time optimizer configured to determine an order inwhich queries are to be executed based on maximizing throughput of thePaaS.
 7. The system as recited in claim 1, further comprising a sharingview which permits the at least one consumer application to view andperform operations on the data being shared by the tenant application.8. The system as recited in claim 1, wherein the PaaS includes anapplication programming interface (API) for receiving data sharingrequests from applications in a uniform manner.
 9. A method for datasharing, comprising: establishing a materialized shared space in acloud, the materialized shared space including a set of resourcesallocated by a platform as a service (PaaS) to permit data sharingbetween a tenant application and at least one consumer application; andproviding the at least one consumer application with access to the datain the materialized shared space to permit data sharing between thetenant application and at least one consumer application.
 10. The methodas recited in claim 9, further comprising determining an appropriateamount of resources to be allocated to the materialized shared space.11. The method as recited in claim 9, further comprising determining anorganization of the data being shared by the tenant application.
 12. Themethod as recited in claim 9, further comprising analyzing workloads ofall tenant and consumer applications, and determining a workload sizefor each.
 13. The method as recited in claim 9, further comprisingdetermining an order in which queries are to be executed in a mannerwhich maximizes throughput on the PaaS.
 14. The method as recited inclaim 9, further comprising providing a sharing view which permits theat least one consumer application to view and perform operations on thedata being shared by the tenant application.
 15. The method as recitedin claim 9, wherein the PaaS includes an application programminginterface (API) for receiving data sharing requests from the at leastone consumer application in a uniform manner.
 16. The method as recitedin claim 9, wherein the at least one consumer application resides on thecloud with the tenant application.
 17. The method as recited in claim 9,wherein the at least one consumer application does not reside on thecloud with the tenant application.
 18. A method for data sharing,comprising: determining an appropriate amount of resources to beallocated to a materialized shared space in a cloud; establishing thematerialized shared space to permit data sharing between a tenantapplication and at least one consumer application; and providing asharing view which permits the at least one consumer application to viewand perform data sharing operations on the data in the materializedshared space.
 19. The method as recited in claim 18, wherein datasharing operations comprise one of reading the data shared by the tenantapplication or updating the data shared by the tenant application. 20.The method as recited in claim 18, wherein the at least one consumerapplication does not reside on the cloud with the tenant application.